Silenced voices: social media polarization and women's marginalization in peacebuilding during the Northern Ethiopia War
- URL: http://arxiv.org/abs/2412.01549v2
- Date: Thu, 18 Sep 2025 15:56:17 GMT
- Title: Silenced voices: social media polarization and women's marginalization in peacebuilding during the Northern Ethiopia War
- Authors: Adem Chanie Ali, Seid Muhie Yimam, Abinew Ali Ayele, Chris Biemann, Martin Semmann,
- Abstract summary: This study examines the complex relationship between social media, polarization, and conflict.<n>It focuses on digital peacebuilding and women's participation, using the Northern Ethiopia War as a case study.
- Score: 19.364430956867455
- License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Abstract: This study examines the complex relationship between social media, polarization, and conflict, with a focus on digital peacebuilding and women's participation, using the Northern Ethiopia War as a case study. Using a qualitative exploratory design through in-depth interviews, focus groups, and document analysis, the research examines how social media platforms influence conflict dynamics. The study applies and advances social identity, liberal feminist, and intersectionality theories to analyze social media's role in shaping conflict, mobilizing ethnic politics, and influencing women's involvement in peacebuilding. Findings reveal that the weaponization of social media intensifies polarization and offline violence. Women are disproportionately impacted through displacement, exclusion from peace negotiations, and heightened risks of gender-based violence, including rape. Contributing factors include hostile online environments, the digital divide, and prevailing socio-cultural norms. The study identifies significant gaps in leveraging digital platforms for sustainable peace, including government-imposed internet shutdowns, unregulated social media environments, and low media literacy. It recommends media literacy initiatives, inclusive peacebuilding frameworks, open and safe digital spaces, and gender-sensitive technological approaches. By centering digital technology, conflict, and gender in the Global South, this research contributes valuable insights to ongoing debates on ICT in conflict, peacebuilding, and women's empowerment.
Related papers
- The Rise of AI Agent Communities: Large-Scale Analysis of Discourse and Interaction on Moltbook [62.2627874717318]
Moltbook is a Reddit-like social platform where AI agents create posts and interact with other agents through comments and replies.<n>Using a public API snapshot collected about five days after launch, we address three research questions: what AI agents discuss, how they post, and how they interact.<n>We show that agents' writing is predominantly neutral, with positivity appearing in community engagement and assistance-oriented content.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2026-02-13T05:28:31Z) - From Public Square to Echo Chamber: The Fragmentation of Online Discourse [0.1227734309612871]
The study explores how digital platforms amplify discrimination discourse including sexism, racism, xenophobia, ableism, homophobia, and religious intolerance.<n>The findings reveal how social media structures exacerbate polarization, cross group dialogue, and erode the collective reasoning essential for a just society.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2025-01-30T15:53:58Z) - Who Sets the Agenda on Social Media? Ideology and Polarization in Online Debates [34.82692226532414]
This study analyzes large-scale Twitter data from three global debates -- Climate Change, COVID-19, and the Russo-Ukrainian War.
Our findings reveal that discussions are not primarily shaped by specific categories of actors, such as media or activists, but by shared ideological alignment.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-12-06T16:48:22Z) - The Politics of Fear and the Experience of Bangladeshi Religious Minority Communities Using Social Media Platforms [22.06516019915214]
We conduct a six-month-long, interview-based study with the Hindu, Buddhist, and Indigenous communities in Bangladesh.
We examine how social media use by religious minorities is influenced by fear, which is associated with social conformity, misinformation, stigma, stereotypes, and South Asian postcolonial memory.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-10-19T20:44:54Z) - A Survey of Stance Detection on Social Media: New Directions and Perspectives [50.27382951812502]
stance detection has emerged as a crucial subfield within affective computing.
Recent years have seen a surge of research interest in developing effective stance detection methods.
This paper provides a comprehensive survey of stance detection techniques on social media.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-24T03:06:25Z) - Community Shaping in the Digital Age: A Temporal Fusion Framework for Analyzing Discourse Fragmentation in Online Social Networks [45.58331196717468]
This research presents a framework for analyzing the dynamics of online communities in social media platforms.
By combining text classification and dynamic social network analysis, we uncover mechanisms driving community formation and evolution.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-09-18T03:03:02Z) - Cyberbully and Online Harassment: Issues Associated with Digital Wellbeing [0.0]
This research synthesizes empirical findings from diverse studies to evaluate how innovative technological interventions contribute to reducing the prevalence of cyberbullying.
The study focuses on the effectiveness of these interventions in various settings, highlighting the need for adaptive strategies that respond to the dynamic digital landscape.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2024-04-29T17:49:49Z) - Understanding Divergent Framing of the Supreme Court Controversies:
Social Media vs. News Outlets [56.67097829383139]
We focus on the nuanced distinctions in framing of social media and traditional media outlets concerning a series of U.S. Supreme Court rulings.
We observe significant polarization in the news media's treatment of affirmative action and abortion rights, whereas the topic of student loans tends to exhibit a greater degree of consensus.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2023-09-18T06:40:21Z) - Aggression and "hate speech" in communication of media users: analysis
of control capabilities [50.591267188664666]
Authors studied the possibilities of mutual influence of users in new media.
They found a high level of aggression and hate speech when discussing an urgent social problem - measures for COVID-19 fighting.
Results can be useful for developing media content in a modern digital environment.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-08-25T15:53:32Z) - Anonymous Expression in an Online Community for Women in China [1.2031796234206136]
Gender issues faced by women can range from workplace harassment to domestic violence.
While publicly disclosing these issues on social media can be hard, some may incline to express themselves anonymously.
We approached such an anonymous female community on Chinese social media where discussion on gender issues takes place.
We identified 20 issues commonly discussed, with cheating-partner, controlling parents and age anxiety taking the lead.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-06-16T04:56:56Z) - Investigating Participation Mechanisms in EU Code Week [68.8204255655161]
Digital competence (DC) is a broad set of skills, attitudes, and knowledge for confident, critical and use of digital technologies.
The aim of the manuscript is to offer a detailed and comprehensive statistical description of Code Week's participation in the EU Member States.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2022-05-29T19:16:03Z) - The Ethical Implications of Digital Contact Tracing for LGBTQIA+
Communities [0.0]
Digital contact tracing has been proposed as a viable means of targeted control in countries across the globe, including on the African continent.
This research paper explores some of the ethical implications of digital contact tracing for the LGBTQIA+ community.
We propose a critical intersectional feminism towards developing inclusive technology that is decentralised and user controlled.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-23T11:54:59Z) - For Better or for Worse? A Framework for Critical Analysis of ICT4D for
Women [0.0]
As ICT diffusion widens, there is a persistent threat of widening the gender-based digital divide.
This paper develops a critical research framework for a gender-focused examination of ICT4D studies.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-23T05:42:24Z) - Survey of Cyber Violence Against Women in Malawi [0.0]
The purpose of this study was to investigate the prevalence of cyber violence against women in Karonga district of Malawi.
The study noted that women experienced various forms of cyber violence such as cyber bullying, cyber harassment, online defamation, cyberstalking, sexual exploitation, online hate speech, and revenge pornography.
It was found that women never bothered to report the incidences to the police or community to seek for support due to lack of awareness, cultural and patriarchal factors.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2021-08-22T18:02:06Z) - Social Media Unrest Prediction during the {COVID}-19 Pandemic: Neural
Implicit Motive Pattern Recognition as Psychometric Signs of Severe Crises [26.447165399064552]
We present psychologically validated social unrest predictors and replicate scalable and automated predictions.
We employ this model to investigate a change of language towards social unrest during the COVID-19 pandemic.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-12-08T17:40:35Z) - Population-Scale Study of Human Needs During the COVID-19 Pandemic:
Analysis and Implications [34.48644183777496]
Pandemic-related policy decisions need to consider the broader impacts on people and their needs.
We propose a computational methodology, building on Maslow's hierarchy of needs, that can capture a holistic view of relative changes in needs following the pandemic.
We apply this approach to characterize changes in human needs across physiological, socioeconomic, and psychological realms in the US, based on more than 35 billion search interactions spanning over 36,000 ZIP codes over a period of 14 months.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-08-17T01:21:58Z) - Fighting the COVID-19 Infodemic in Social Media: A Holistic Perspective
and a Call to Arms [42.7332883578842]
With the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, people turned to social media to read and to share timely information.
There was also a new blending of medical and political misinformation and disinformation, which gave rise to the first global infodemic.
This is a complex problem that needs a holistic approach combining the perspectives of journalists, fact-checkers, policymakers, government entities, social media platforms, and society as a whole.
arXiv Detail & Related papers (2020-07-15T21:18:30Z)
This list is automatically generated from the titles and abstracts of the papers in this site.
This site does not guarantee the quality of this site (including all information) and is not responsible for any consequences.